Contents
Community,
class and conservation: Development politics on the Kanyakumari
coast
Ajantha Subramanian
In
this article I trace the chequered history of ‘community’
in the coastal belt of Kanyakumari district, from its immediate
post-independence role as a mechanism of state intervention in fisheries
development to its use in the 1990s in fisher claims to rights and
resources, and as a means for devolving conflict management to the
local level. I show that the expansion of the state system, in part
through development intervention, opened up a charged political
arena where Kanyakumari’s fishers acquired new tools to negotiate
political authority, redefine community and articulate new rights
of citizenship. Most importantly, I demonstrate that the development
process furthered the mutual implication of state and community,
a process that the state has been reluctant to acknowledge. I end
the article by arguing that the Tamil Nadu state government’s
neglect of marine conservation is a function of a bureaucratic sensibility
that distinguishes ‘state policy’ from ‘community
politics’, and resource conservation from social justice,
an attitude that has hardened with economic liberalisation. This
perspective has prevented the government from taking seriously artisanal
fisher demands for trawler regulation and from recognising artisanal
activism as a defence of both sectoral rights and of conservation.
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